James Gardner, CTO at DWP, is writing an e-book about what the enterprise sales process looks like from the buyer’s point of view. (The chapter on Tricks Vendors Play to get a first foot in the door promises to be particularly interesting…)
A recent extract posted on his blog talks about the tell-tale signs of a ‘gone native Account Director‘ (an Account Director who feels they work for the client organisation rather than their own, is building a true partnership with their customer, and is embarrassed by any overt attempts to sell to the client because they believe the client will bring opportunities to them rather than the other way round).
Now I’m putting words into James’ mouth here, but he seems to be saying that going native is a good thing for an Account Director – and ultimately for the sales operation they work in – because a true partner will end up with more (or better quality) business than they would have done through hard selling.
I would suggest that Marketing needs to think about the same principles too. We know for a fact that the campaigns we run work best when they “don’t feel like marketing” to the end audience – that’s a key principle of course for social media and it’s always been valid in real life too. But it’s very difficult to achieve, and only possible I would argue if you start from
- a real interest in the issues of the marketplace;
- combined with a deep belief that things could be better for that marketplace if they thought more about what you have to offer;
- and an interest/affinity for the people you believe you can help.
Those are the defining beliefs of pretty much all the best marketers I know. Start from anywhere else, and the sales objectives you’re trying to support will be blatantly obvious – to such an extent that they will switch off the audience. So much so that I find myself getting embarrassed when I see examples of marketing that add nothing to a bare sales message, or are obviously trying to promote a course of action that will result in a sale. (I’ll pick out some examples of this from advertising in this month’s Harvard Business Review in an upcoming post.)
Now this isn’t to say that Marketing shouldn’t be about supporting sales objectives – if it isn’t helping to sell today or creating a better sales environment for tomorrow, then it doesn’t have any reason to exist. But the point is that – for the ‘gone-native Marketer’ – successfully driving sales is inextricably tied to the belief that their product/service can make the world a better place, a desire to find opportunities to make this happen, and a deep interest in the people whose world they can improve.
2 comments
I definitely buy in to the argument that a ‘gone native’ account director is going to have the most effective relationship with a client in the long run. But the point that they are embarassed abou taking new propositons to their client bears thinking about some more – it could really de-rail a business’ drive to introduce new products/services. It should be part of marketing’s role to make sure they have a way to take the new proposition out without being embarassed!
Thanks Sarah – you make a great point about one of the biggest disadvantages of the ‘gone native’ account director. You can entirely understand how it happens – if they have any doubt about their company’s ability to deliver on a new proposition, or whether it is 100% right for the client, then they’re not likely to raise it with the client. Given that their company could be relying on existing clients being the first market for a new proposition, this could cause some real problems.
I’d agree with you that Marketing can offer a route out of this. It’s one of the points I’d make about ‘gone native Marketing’ – it should be producing materials/content/activities that are so compelling to the target audience that an account director would be delighted to share them with their client. What’s more, the client could be finding them for themselves, or receiving them straight from Marketing, and so the client could be initiating the conversation with the account director rather than the other way around.
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